Warren Edwardes
Warren Edwardes
How to arrive at a Sweetness of Wine indicator?
The terms, Dry, Medium Dry etc. (certainly as defined by The EU) are very broad.
Some wineries / distributors have sweetness indicators 1 to 9.
Residual Sugar in grams/litre quoted on bottles would be a good start.
But we know that acidity changes the impression of sweetness. Sort of a wind chill factor.
So lets also quote the acidity in grams/litre. Trouble is some refer to acidity in Sulphuric acid and others in Tartaric acid terms. One is 1.53 times the other. Or the other way round?
How about pH? Sounds good.
So I say do away with talk of "Give me a nice Dry White" and lets ask for a 6 grams/litre wine with 2.9 pH shall we?
But how about simplifying with a composite Sweetness Score?
Off the top of my head I would say:
SS = RS x pH
RS is residual sugar in grams/litre.
How does this sound?
The terms, Dry, Medium Dry etc. (certainly as defined by The EU) are very broad.
Some wineries / distributors have sweetness indicators 1 to 9.
Residual Sugar in grams/litre quoted on bottles would be a good start.
But we know that acidity changes the impression of sweetness. Sort of a wind chill factor.
So lets also quote the acidity in grams/litre. Trouble is some refer to acidity in Sulphuric acid and others in Tartaric acid terms. One is 1.53 times the other. Or the other way round?
How about pH? Sounds good.
So I say do away with talk of "Give me a nice Dry White" and lets ask for a 6 grams/litre wine with 2.9 pH shall we?
But how about simplifying with a composite Sweetness Score?
Off the top of my head I would say:
SS = RS x pH
RS is residual sugar in grams/litre.
How does this sound?